| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Most populous U.S. territory | Puerto Rico | 100%
|
| Capital is Pago Pago | American Samoa | 63%
|
| Its capital is Hagåtña, also known as Agana | Guam | 63%
|
| Far from Carolina but has a ethnic group known as Carolinians. Also home to Chamorros. | Northern Mariana Islands | 56%
|
| Used the Danish West Indian daler despite being purchased by the U.S. in 1917. | United States Virgin Islands | 50%
|
| This 2.1 sq. mi. island is in a territorial dispute with Haiti, which calls the island Lanavaz | Navassa Island | 38%
|
| Home to around 8,700 Vietnamese refugees during Operation New Life of 1975, but its population hovers around 300 today. | Wake Atoll | 31%
|
| Workers at its guano mine called this island, aquired in 1857, Puaka‘ilima (Ilima Flower). | Baker Island | 19%
|
| Was home to a failed settlement, called Itascatown, that in 1940 'boasted' 4 residents. | Howland Island | 19%
|
| Formerly known as Bunker's Shoal; home to abandoned guano mines | Jarvis Island | 19%
|
| Mostly submerged, triangular reef | Kingman Reef | 19%
|
| Unofficial flag features an albatross; home to a famous naval base known previously as Henderson Field | Midway Atoll | 19%
|
| They were the highest oil consumers per capita on the globe in 2007 | United States Virgin Islands | 13%
|
| Home to 2 islands though name inplies one; also employs the slogan "Where America's day really starts." | Wake Atoll | 13%
|
| Split from fellow members of its archipelago by the International Date Line | American Samoa | 6%
|
| To gain entry, a potential visitor needs a letter of authorization from the USAF | Johnson Atoll | 6%
|
| Has been used as a naval refueling depot, an airbase, a testing site for nuclear and biological weapons, a secret missile base, and a site for the storage and disposal of chemical weapons and Agent Orange. | Johnson Atoll | 6%
|
| Known by native inhabitants as Borikén or Borinquén | Puerto Rico | 6%
|